BOOKS

Perspectives on Identity Theft

Megan M. McNally and Graeme R. Newman, editors

Presenting new research on the crime of identity theft, the authors of this volume focus on situational measures to protect sensitive personal information.    More >

Perspectives on Identity Theft

Peru's APRA: Parties, Politics, and the Elusive Quest for Democracy

Carol Graham

When Peru's APRA—one of the oldest and most controversial political parties in Latin America—came to power in 1985, expectations were high for the new government, in part because a decade of economic decline and social crisis had discredited both the military and the right as alternatives. APRA did manage to maintain an unprecedented consensus for two years. But a sudden shift in    More >

Peru's APRA:  Parties, Politics, and the Elusive Quest for Democracy

Piecing a Democratic Quilt? Regional Organizations and Universal Norms

Edward McMahon and Scott Baker

Providing essential analysis and insights, Edward McMahon and Scott Baker assess the various approaches that regional organizations have been developing to promote their member- states' adherence to democratic principles.    More >

Piecing a Democratic Quilt? Regional Organizations and Universal Norms

Piety and Poverty: Working-Class Religion in Berlin, London, and New York, 1820–1914

Hugh McLeod

Choice Outstanding Academic Book! Drawing on moving personal accounts—letters, oral histories, and memoirs—as well as original documentary evidence found in parish records, histories, and demographic data, Hugh McLeod explores the role of religion in the everyday life of working-class communities. The book reveals how belief and unbelief are related to the experiences of poverty,    More >

Piety and Poverty: Working-Class Religion in Berlin, London, and New York, 1820–1914

Pill Politics: Drugs and the FDA

Stephen J. Ceccoli

From aspirin to Viagra to the latest cancer treatment, the Food and Drug Administration acts as a gatekeeper determining what medicines are legally available in the United States. But in fulfilling that regulatory role, Stephen Ceccoli argues, the FDA may inadvertently be promoting new drugs at the expense of public health. The FDA's initial mandate to protect health grew out of    More >

Pill Politics: Drugs and the FDA

Pivotal Poland: Europe's Rising Power

Janusz Bugajski

Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine precipitated a tectonic shift in European security dynamics, ending a relatively peaceful post–Cold War phase and moving the epicenter of European security eastward, to Poland. Janusz Bugajski explores the nature and context of Warsaw's determined efforts to shape NATO's eastern policy and to build a strong, modern military able to resist    More >

Pivotal Poland: Europe's Rising Power

Players and Issues in International Aid

Paula Hoy

Paula Hoy provides a one-stop source of vital information on the politics, players, and issues surrounding international development assistance.    More >

Players and Issues in International Aid

Plays, Prefaces and Postscripts of Tawfiq-al-Hakim, Volume 1 : Theater of the Mind

Tawfiq al-Hakim, translated and introduced by William Maynard

Includes The Wisdom of Solomon, King Oedipus, Shahrazad, Princess Sunshine, and Angels’ Prayer.    More >

Plays, Prefaces and Postscripts of Tawfiq-al-Hakim, Volume 1 : Theater of the Mind

Poetic Inquiry for the Social and Human Sciences: Voices from the South and North

Heidi van Rooyen and Kathleen Pithouse-Morgan, editors

Poetic inquiry, or poetic research, is a literary and performance arts–based approach that combines arts and humanities with scientific inquiry to enhance social research. This groundbreaking collection shows how using poetry from diverse traditions in the Global South can promote innovative research on pressing social justice issues such as inclusion and decolonization. To that end, each    More >

Poetic Inquiry for the Social and Human Sciences: Voices from the South and North

Polarization and the Presidency: From FDR to Barack Obama

Robert C. Smith and Richard A. Seltzer

Choice Outstanding Academic Book! Robert Smith and Richard Seltzer offer fresh insights on the decisive, and often surprising, role of presidents and presidential candidates in polarizing US politics.     In a rich, multidimensional narrative, the authors show how presidential rhetoric and policies have served to divide voters along lines of class, party, race, and region. They    More >

Polarization and the Presidency: From FDR to Barack Obama